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		Judge to weigh sentence for South 
		Carolina ex-policeman who killed black man 
		
		 
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		 [December 05, 2017] 
		By Greg Lacour 
		 
		CHARLESTON, S.C. (Reuters) - U.S. 
		prosecutors said on Monday that a white former South Carolina policeman 
		caught on video shooting an unarmed black man in the back committed 
		murder, while defense lawyers argued their client did not deserve to go 
		to prison for life for his crime. 
		 
		Michael Slager, 36, pleaded guilty in May to a federal civil rights 
		charge of using excessive force when he killed 50-year-old Walter Scott 
		in 2015. Slager, then a North Charleston police officer, fired eight 
		shots at Scott's back after he fled a traffic stop, hitting him five 
		times. 
		 
		A bystander's cellphone video of the shooting was widely seen and drew 
		national attention to the case, which exacerbated concerns about how 
		police treat minorities in cities across the United States. 
		 
		At the sentencing hearing on Monday in U.S. District Court in 
		Charleston, prosecutor Jared Fishman said Slager's actions constituted 
		second-degree murder, punishable by life in prison. 
		
		
		  
		
		Prosecutors have said Slager showed malice, obstructed justice by moving 
		his stun gun closer to Scott's body after the shooting and lied to 
		investigators. 
		 
		The shooting was "deliberate, calculated and not driven by emotion," 
		Fishman said. 
		 
		Slager's lawyers have said his underlying offense was voluntary 
		manslaughter, punishable by 10 to 13 years in prison, according to 
		federal sentencing guidelines. The officer feared for his life when 
		Scott took his stun gun during a struggle, they said.  
		 
		Defense lawyer Andy Savage disputed that Slager lied about Scott trying 
		to take his Taser or that racism drove Slager's actions. 
		 
		
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			Former North Charleston police officer Michael Slager looks on 
			during testimony in his murder trial at the Charleston County court 
			in Charleston, South Carolina, U.S. November 29, 2016. REUTERS/Grace 
			Beahm/Post and Courier/Pool/File Photo 
            
			  
			During Slager’s more than five years on the police force, "every 
			ticket he wrote, every stop he made, had not the slightest 
			indication of racial animus," Savage said. 
			 
			However, Feidin Santana, 26, who took the video of the shooting on 
			his way to work at a barber shop on April 4, 2015, testified that he 
			never saw Scott try to assault Slager, charge at him or reach for 
			his stun gun. 
			 
			As part of Slager's plea agreement, prosecutors dropped two other 
			federal charges and a pending state murder charge. A state trial 
			last fall ended with a hung jury. 
			 
			Convictions of U.S. police officers charged in on-duty fatal 
			shootings are rare. 
			 
			Scott family lawyer Chris Stewart said before the hearing that 
			Slager deserved life in prison. 
			 
			"You've got to send an example to the whole nation that this kind of 
			stuff can't happen," he said in a telephone interview. 
			 
			(Reporting by Greg Lacour; Additional reporting by Harriet McLeod; 
			Writing by Colleen Jenkins; Editing by Dan Grebler) 
			
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